humanize_number(3). Bringing in additional revisions from NetBSD's
humanize_number(3) will fix the tests
Account for the fact that util.h on NetBSD is libutil.h on FreeBSD
Submitted by: pho
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
- Read the counts of received, dropped, and transmitted management
packets and add sysctl nodes for them.
- Fix the total octets received/transmitted to read all 64 bits of
the counters.
- Add missing sysctl nodes for rlec, tncrs, fcruc, tor, and tot.
- Remove spurious spaces.
Reviewed by: Eric Joyner @ Intel
MFC after: 1 week
is added to return EEXIST when only "b" interface exists---this can happen
when epair<N>b is moved to a vnet jail and then "ifconfig epair<N> create"
is invoked there.
The powerpc support was the only supported architecture not prepending the elf format name
with "-freebsd" in base this change makes it consistent with other architectures.
On newer version of binutils the powerpc format is also prepended with "-freebsd".
Also modify the kernel ldscripts in that regards.
As a result it is now possible cross build the kernel on powerpc using newer binutils
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D926
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D928
These are needed for the forthcoming vxlan implementation. The context
pointer means we do not have to use a spare pointer field in the inpcb,
and the source address is required to populate vxlan's forwarding table.
While I highly doubt there is an out of tree consumer of the UDP
tunneling callback, this change may be a difficult to eventually MFC.
Phabricator: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D383
Reviewed by: gnn
gperf is used as a build tool for g++ and is not needed for Clang
architectures. Ports and third-party software that need it can use the
up-to-date devel/gperf port.
PR: 194103 (exp-run)
Reviewed by: bapt
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D886
lgamma(x) = -log(x) - log(1+x) + x*(1-g) + x**2*P(x) with g = 0.57...
being the Euler constant and P(x) a polynomial. Substitution of small
into the RHS shows that the last 3 terms are negligible in comparison to
the leading term. The choice of 3 may be conservative.
The value large=2**(p+3) is detemined from Stirling's approximation
lgamma(x) = x*(log(x)-1) - log(x)/2 + log(2*pi)/2 + P(1/x)/x
Again, substitution of large into the RHS reveals the last 3 terms
are negligible in comparison to the leading term.
Move the x=+-0 special case into the |x|<small block.
In the ld80 and ld128 implementaion, use fdlibm compatible comparisons
involving ix, lx, and llx. This replaces several floating point
comparisons (some involving fabsl()) and also fixes the special cases
x=1 and x=2.
While here
. Remove unnecessary parentheses.
. Fix/improve comments due to the above changes.
. Fix nearby whitespace.
* src/e_lgamma_r.c:
. Sort declaration.
. Remove unneeded explicit cast for type conversion.
. Replace a double literal constant by an integer literal constant.
* src/e_lgammaf_r.c:
. Sort declaration.
* ld128/e_lgammal_r.c:
. Replace a long double literal constant by a double literal constant.
* ld80/e_lgammal_r.c:
. Remove unused '#include float.h'
. Replace a long double literal constant by a double literal constant.
Requested by: bde
Linux LD_ITERATE_PHDR(3):
The dlpi_name field is a null-terminated string giving the
pathname from which the shared object was loaded.
That functionality is much more useful than returning just the short
name.
Approved by: kan
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Main user-visible changes are related to tables:
* Tables are now identified by names, not numbers.
There can be up to 65k tables with up to 63-byte long names.
* Tables are now set-aware (default off), so you can switch/move
them atomically with rules.
* More functionality is supported (swap, lock, limits, user-level lookup,
batched add/del) by generic table code.
* New table types are added (flow) so you can match multiple packet fields at once.
* Ability to add different type of lookup algorithms for particular
table type has been added.
* New table algorithms are added (cidr:hash, iface:array, number:array and
flow:hash) to make certain types of lookup more effective.
* Table value are now capable of holding multiple data fields for
different tablearg users
Performance changes:
* Main ipfw lock was converted to rmlock
* Rule counters were separated from rule itself and made per-cpu.
* Radix table entries fits into 128 bytes
* struct ip_fw is now more compact so more rules will fit into 64 bytes
* interface tables uses array of existing ifindexes for faster match
ABI changes:
All functionality supported by old ipfw(8) remains functional.
Old & new binaries can work together with the following restrictions:
* Tables named other than ^\d+$ are shown as table(65535) in
ruleset in old binaries
Internal changes:.
Changing table ids to numbers resulted in format modification for
most sockopt codes. Old sopt format was compact, but very hard to
extend (no versioning, inability to add more opcodes), so
* All relevant opcodes were converted to TLV-based versioned IP_FW3-based codes.
* The remaining opcodes were also converted to be able to eliminate
all older opcodes at once
* All IP_FW3 handlers uses special API instead of calling sooptcopy*
directly to ease adding another communication methods
* struct ip_fw is now different for kernel and userland
* tablearg value has been changed to 0 to ease future extensions
* table "values" are now indexes in special value array which
holds extended data for given index
* Batched add/delete has been added to tables code
* Most changes has been done to permit batched rule addition.
* interface tracking API has been added (started on demand)
to permit effective interface tables operations
* O(1) skipto cache, currently turned off by default at
compile-time (eats 512K).
* Several steps has been made towards making libipfw:
* most of new functions were separated into "parse/prepare/show
and actuall-do-stuff" pieces (already merged).
* there are separate functions for parsing text string into "struct ip_fw"
and printing "struct ip_fw" to supplied buffer (already merged).
* Probably some more less significant/forgotten features
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: Yandex LLC
values. Therefore the bit width of the "PM Timer Block" was actually being
interpreted as 50-bits instead of the expected 32-bit.
This eliminates an error message emitted by a Linux 3.17 guest during boot:
"Invalid length for FADT/PmTimerBlock: 50, using default 32"
Reviewed by: grehan
MFC after: 1 week
Move the SCTP syscalls to netinet with the rest of the SCTP code.
Submitted by: Steve Kiernan <stevek@juniper.net>
Reviewed by: tuexen, rrs
Obtained from: Juniper Networks, Inc.
syscalls themselves are tightly coupled with the network stack and
therefore should not be in the generic socket code.
The following four syscalls have been marked as NOSTD so they can be
dynamically registered in sctp_syscalls_init() function:
sys_sctp_peeloff
sys_sctp_generic_sendmsg
sys_sctp_generic_sendmsg_iov
sys_sctp_generic_recvmsg
The syscalls are also set up to be dynamically registered when COMPAT32
option is configured.
As a side effect of moving the SCTP syscalls, getsock_cap needs to be
made available outside of the uipc_syscalls.c source file. A proper
prototype has been added to the sys/socketvar.h header file.
API tests from the SCTP reference implementation have been run to ensure
compatibility. (http://code.google.com/p/sctp-refimpl/source/checkout)
Submitted by: Steve Kiernan <stevek@juniper.net>
Reviewed by: tuexen, rrs
Obtained from: Juniper Networks, Inc.